Currently, several approaches exist towards packaging KDE applications for Windows, and we will try to outline each approach and the steps involved. Which approach (or approaches) you chose will depend on the type of your application, and your personal taste. The main benefits and drawbacks of each approach are listed in the respective sections.

Note that the approaches are not mutually exclusive, and in particular it is probably always a good idea to provide an emerge script.

Emerge allows to build KDE, and assorted other software on Windows from source, very easily. If you are developing KDE apps on Windows, you are probably familiar with it, already (and if you are not, you better take a look). Emerge also forms the basis for package building for the #KDE windows installer.

KDE on windows is self-contained, i.e. does not rely on the registry, or installed components outside of the main installation directory. This means you can simply zip a KDE installation (including your app) and let the user download and unzip on their system.